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Final Programme

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East Africa Day – 22 June 2005

Date and Venue

Date: Wednesday 22 June 2005, 10.00 a.m. – 6.00 p.m.
Venue: Poortgebouw (Leiden University) for plenary sessions and the neighbouring ‘Chalet’ for parallel sessions. The locations are within walking distance – 5 minutes - from Leiden Central Station.

Organisation

The East Africa Day 2005 is being organised by the (Dutch) Development Policy Review Network and the African Studies Centre (Leiden). The organising team is:

  1. Mirjam Ukpabi, tel. +31 (0)71 527 33 96 / 58, e-mail:  Oukpabi@ascleiden.nl
  2. Marieke van Winden, tel. +31 (0)71 527 58, e-mail: Winden@ascleiden.nl
  3. André Leliveld,  tel. +31 (0)71 527 33 96 / 72, e-mail: Leliveld@ascleiden.nl
  4. Mirjam Ros-Tonen, tel +31 (0)20 525 4179 / 4062, e-mail: M.A.F.Ros-Tonen@uva.nl

Programme

09:30 a.m. – 10:00 a.m.
Arrival of the participants

10.00 a.m. – 10.15 a.m.
Opening and welcome by the Director of the CERES Research School, co-founder of the Development Policy Review Network (DPRN) and the regional expert meetings initiative, and today’s Chair Ton Dietz.

10.15 a.m. – 11.15 a.m. (plenary session)
‘Speed dating’
Meet the people whose names you know, whom you have never met but have always wanted to.

11.30 a.m. – 12.45 p.m. (plenary session)
Perspectives on developments in East Africa.
In their opening addresses, Deborah Bryceson, economic geographer at the African Studies Centre, and Peter Vermaas, a journalist who has wide-ranging experience in East Africa (Uganda and Kenya in particular), are going to focus on the actual situation in the region. After their presentations, the participants will be given the opportunity to react. Investigative journalist Jos van Beurden will lead the plenary discussion on relevant trends in development in the East African region . During this plenary session, the participants will also reflect on the themes they suggested at an earlier stage. The aim will be to optimise synergy between policy, science and development practice.

12.45 p.m. – 1.45 p.m. (plenary)
Soko. Participants can meet and discuss informally at the soko (market) over a cup of (East African) tea, coffee or (Dutch) milk and a sandwich. The market place will be officially opened by Mirjam Ros-Tonen, who will briefly introduce the database plans (Global Connections) of the DPRN. Participants are invited to bring posters, documentation and publications relating to their own or their organisations’ work in East Africa.

2.00 p.m. - 4.00 p.m. (parallel sessions)
Thematic sessions. In the thematic meetings scholars, policymakers and development practitioners will exchange views and opinions on selected issues which are currently relevant in East Africa. The starting point for each session will be the results and conclusions of publications which provide new and/or provoking insights into the theme being discussed and which are relevant to policy. Ideally, the sessions will then generate insights into possible synergies between research and policy, the implications for the research agendas, and how this relates to current research agendas and preferences. The objective of the sessions is to generate concrete suggestions on how to improve mutual links and exchange.

Session A. Donor Policies and Rural Poverty Reduction.
Two recent IOB evaluation reports form the input for this session. One of them deals with Dutch support for local governance in Uganda (2003) and the other with Dutch aid to two (former) District Development Programmes in Tanzania (2004). Although written from different perspectives, both studies evaluate programmes supported by the Netherlands which are aimed at rural poverty reduction. Jan Sterkenburg, an independent consultant involved in both evaluations, will introduce the reports.

The reports make it clear that the focus of Dutch aid has shifted during the last decades from macro-oriented to decentralised rural development programmes, in the expectation that this would reduce poverty more effectively. The effects in terms of rural poverty reduction have, however, been disappointing. Dutch support for decentralised rural development programmes in practice meant the strengthening of local governance and related capacity building. This, in turn, led to a shift away from democratisation and empowerment of the local population towards capacity building of the state, and to a shift away from economic development towards social development issues. Moreover, the district-based programmes supported by the Netherlands paid little attention to poverty analysis and monitoring at micro level, and linkages between micro, meso and macro levels.

The conclusions of both reports raise interesting questions for further discussion between policymakers, development practitioners and researchers:

  1. How can poverty analysis and monitoring become an integral part of policy and programme formulation and implementation and what role can (local) universities and researchers play in this respect?
  2. To what extent do sector-wide approaches (SWAPs) aimed at rural poverty reduction create better opportunities for integrating micro, meso and macro linkages in, for instance, local governance and agriculture, and how can (academic) research contribute insights into this question?
  3. How do the roles of the state and the private sector relate to each other in rural development programmes? Should the economic dimension of rural development be made more explicit in policies and programmes and how can this be done? What role can research play in clarifying these questions?

Session B. Humanitarian Aid and Local capacity building in East Africa.
This session has been CANCELLED!

Session C Land policies and rural development programmes
In East Africa, like elsewhere, land policies are a government-owned domain in which donors generally have little say or abstain from interfering. Nevertheless, existing and changing land policies play a crucial role in the success or failure of donor-supported rural development programmes. Based on evidence from Kenya, several aspects of the land question (land conflicts, land policies, land conservation, etc.), their relationships with rural development efforts, and their implications for donor policies in the area of rural development will be discussed.

Leading questions for the session are:

  1. To what extent are land policies taken into account in the formulation of donor policies and in the implementation in rural development programmes? What constraints do donors face in this respect?
  2. How, and to what extent, can land issues become part of policy and programme formulation and implementation and what role can (local) universities and researchers play in this respect?

The session is to be introduced by Marcel Rutten, senior researcher at the African Studies Centre who has carried out extensive research into land policies in Kenya in the last 10 years.

4.15 p.m. – 17.00 p.m. (plenary session)
Refreshments and thoughts on the future. While enjoying a glass of beer, wine, soda or juice, a brief evaluation will be held with the participants. What is the participants’ assessment of this first East Africa Day? Two other East Africa days are going to be organised in 2006 and 2007 respectively. What are the expectations of the participants regarding these two days? What topics and issues should be on the agenda of the future events?

5.00 p.m. – 6.00 p.m. (plenary)
More refreshments

Directions to the ASC

Directions

You can park the car via the entrance of Wassenaarseweg 62

 

 

 

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